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Saturday, October 04, 2025

The Weaponized World Economy

The Weaponized World Economy

Surviving the New Age of Economic Coercion

September/October 2025 Published on August 19, 2025 


When Washington announced a “framework deal” with China in June, it marked a silent shifting of gears in the global political economy. This was not the beginning of U.S. President Donald Trump’s imagined epoch of “liberation” under unilateral American greatness or a return to the Biden administration’s dream of managed great-power rivalry. Instead, it was the true opening of the age of weaponized interdependence, in which the United States is discovering what it is like to have others do unto it as it has eagerly done unto others.

This new era will be shaped by weapons of economic and technological coercion—sanctions, supply chain attacks, and export measures—that repurpose the many points of control in the infrastructure that underpins the interdependent global economy. For over two decades, the United States has unilaterally weaponized these chokepoints in finance, information flows, and technology for strategic advantage. But market exchange has become hopelessly entangled with national security, and the United States must now defend its interests in a world in which other powers can leverage chokepoints of their own.

That is why the Trump administration had to make a deal with China. Administration officials now acknowledge that they made concessions on semiconductor export controls in return for China’s easing restrictions on rare-earth minerals that were crippling the United States’ auto industry. U.S. companies that provide chip design software, such as Synopsys and Cadence, can once again sell their technology in China. This concession will help the Chinese semiconductor industry wriggle out of the bind it found itself in when the Biden administration started limiting China’s ability to build advanced semiconductors. And the U.S. firm Nvidia can again sell H20 chips for training artificial intelligence to Chinese customers.

In a little-noticed speech in June, Secretary of State Marco Rubio hinted at the administration’s reasoning. China had “cornered the market” for rare earths, putting the United States and the world in a “crunch,” he said. The administration had come to realize “that our industrial capability is deeply dependent on a number of potential adversary nation-states, including China, who can hold it over our head,” shifting the “nature of geopolitics,” in “one of the great challenges of the new century.”

Although Rubio emphasized self-reliance as a solution, the administration’s rush to make a deal demonstrates the limits of going it alone. The United States is ratcheting back its own threats to persuade adversaries not to cripple vital parts of the U.S. economy. Other powers, too, are struggling to figure out how to advance their interests in a world in which economic power and national security are merging, and economic and technological integration have turned from a promise to a threat.

Washington had to remake its national security state after other countries developed the atomic bomb; in a similar way, it will have to rebuild its economic security state for a world in which adversaries and allies can also weaponize interdependence. In short, economic weapons are proliferating just as nuclear weapons did, creating new dilemmas for the United States and other powers. China has adapted to this new world with remarkable speed; other powers, such as European countries, have struggled. All will have to update their strategic thinking about how their own doctrines and capabilities intersect with the doctrines and capabilities of other powers, and how businesses, which have their own interests and capabilities, will respond.

The problem for the United States is that the Trump administration is gutting the very resources that it needs to advance U.S. interests and protect against countermoves. In the nuclear age, the United States made historic investments in the institutions, infrastructure, and weapons systems that would propel it to long-term advantage. Now, the Trump administration seems to be actively undermining those sources of strength. As the administration goes blow for blow with the Chinese, it is ripping apart the systems of expertise necessary to navigate the complex trade offs that it faces. Every administration is forced to build the plane as it flies, but this is the first one to pull random parts from the engine at 30,000 feet.

As China rapidly adapts to the new realities of weaponized interdependence, it is building its own alternative “stack” of mutually reinforcing high-tech industries centered on the energy economy. Europe is floundering at the moment, but over time, it may also create its own alternative suite of technologies. The United States, uniquely, is flinging its institutional and technological advantages away. A failure by Washington to meet the changes in the international system will not only harm U.S. national interests but also threaten the long-term health of U.S. firms and the livelihoods of American citizens.

THE WORLD GLOBALIZATION MADE

Weaponized interdependence is an unanticipated byproduct of the grand era of globalization that is drawing to a close. After the Cold War ended, businesses built an interdependent global economy on top of U.S.-centered infrastructure. The United States’ technological platforms—the Internet, e-commerce, and, later, social media—wove the world’s communications systems together. Global financial systems also combined thanks to dollar clearing, in which businesses directly or indirectly use U.S. dollars for international deals; correspondent banks that implement such transactions; and the SWIFT financial messaging network. U.S.-centered semiconductor manufacturing was spun out into a myriad of specialized processes across Europe and Asia, but key intellectual property, such as semiconductor software design, remained in the hands of a few U.S. companies. Each of these systems could be understood as its own “stack,” interconnected complexes of related technologies and services that came to reinforce one another, so that, for example, buying into the open Internet increasingly meant buying into U.S. platforms and e-commerce systems, too. At a time when geopolitics seemed the stuff of antiquated Cold War thrillers, few worried about becoming dependent on economic infrastructure provided by other countries.

That was a mistake for Washington’s adversaries and, eventually, for its allies, too. After the 9/11 attacks in 2001, the United States began using these systems to pursue terrorists and their backers. Over two decades of cumulative experimentation, U.S. authorities expanded their ambitions and reach. The United States graduated from exploiting financial chokepoints against terrorists to deploying sanctions to target banks and, in time, to cutting entire countries, such as Iran, out of the global financial system. The Internet was transformed into a global surveillance apparatus, allowing the United States to demand that platforms and search companies, which were regulated by U.S. authorities, hand over crucial strategic information on their worldwide users.

The infrastructure of economic interdependence was turned against both the United States’ enemies and its friends. When the first Trump administration pulled out of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, which the United States and other major countries, including in Europe, had negotiated with Iran in 2015 to limit its nuclear program, the United States threatened to sanction Europeans who continued to do business with the Islamic Republic. European governments found themselves largely unable to protect their own companies against U.S. power.

This was the context in which we first wrote about weaponized interdependence in 2019. By that point, many of the most important economic networks underpinning globalization—communications, finance, production—had become so highly centralized that a small number of key firms and economic actors effectively controlled them. Governments that could assert authority over these firms, most notably the U.S. government, could tap them for information about their adversaries or exclude rivals from access to these vital points in the global economy. Over two decades, the United States had built institutions to assert and direct this authority in response to a series of particular crises.

Some of Trump’s senior officials happened on our academic research and, to our amazement, liked what they saw. According to the historian Chris Miller’s 2022 book, Chip War, when the administration wanted to squeeze the Chinese telecommunications manufacturer Huawei harder, one senior official seized on the idea of weaponized interdependence as a playbook to strengthen export controls against semiconductors, describing the concept as a “beautiful thing.”

Economic weapons are proliferating just as nuclear weapons did.

Our primary purpose, however, was to expose the ugly underbelly of such weaponization. The world that globalization made was not the flat landscape of peaceful market competition that its advocates had promised. Instead, it was riddled with hierarchy, power relations, and strategic vulnerabilities.

Moreover, it was fundamentally unstable. American actions would invite reactions by targets and counteractions by the United States. The biggest powers could play offense, looking for vulnerabilities that they, too, could exploit. Smaller powers might seek to use less accountable or transparent channels of exchange, effectively building dark spaces into the global economy. The more the United States turned interconnections against its adversaries, the more likely it was that these adversaries—and even allies—would disconnect, hide, or retaliate. As others weaponized interdependence, the connecting fabric of the global economy would be rewoven according to a new logic, creating a world based more on offense and defense than on common commercial interest.

U.S. President Joe Biden also used weaponization as an everyday tool of statecraft. His administration took Trump’s semiconductor export controls to a new level, deploying them first against Russia, in order to weaken Moscow’s weapons program, and then against China, denying Beijing access to the high-end semiconductors it needed to efficiently train artificial intelligence systems. According to The Washington Post, a document drafted by Biden administration officials intended to limit the use of sanctions to urgent national security problems inexorably shriveled from 40 pages to eight pages of toothless recommendations. One former official complained of a “relentless, never-ending, you-must-sanction-everybody-and-their-sister . . . system” that was “out of control.”

Similar worries plagued export controls. Policy experts warned that technology restrictions encouraged China to escape the grasp of the United States and develop its own ecosystem of advanced technologies. That did not stop the Biden administration, which in its final weeks announced an extraordinarily ambitious scheme to divide the entire world into three parts: the United States and a few of its closest friends as a chosen elite, the large majority of countries in the middle, and a small number of bitter adversaries at the bottom of the heap. Through export controls, the United States and its close partners would retain access to both the semiconductors used to train powerful AI and the most recent “weights”—the mathematical engines that drive frontier models—while denying them to U.S. adversaries and forcing most countries to sign up to general restrictions. If this worked, it would ensure a long-term American advantage in AI.

Although the Trump administration abandoned this grand technocratic master plan, it certainly has not abandoned the goal of U.S. dominance and control of chokepoints. The problem for the United States is that others are not sitting idly by. Instead, they are building the economic and institutional means to resist.

A TASTE OF YOUR OWN MEDICINE

The weapons of interdependence have been proliferating for several years and are now being deployed to counter U.S. power. As China and the European Union began to understand their risks, they, too, tried to shore up their own vulnerabilities and perhaps take advantage of the vulnerabilities of others. For these great powers, as for the United States, simply identifying key economic chokepoints is not enough. It is also necessary to build the state apparatus that can gather sufficient information to grasp the immediate benefits and risks and then put that information to use. China’s approach is coming to fruition as it presses on the United States’ vulnerabilities to force it to the negotiating table. By contrast, Europe’s internal institutional weaknesses force it to vacillate, putting it in a dangerous position vis-à-vis the United States and China.

For China, the former U.S. National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden’s 2013 exposure of U.S. surveillance practices demonstrated both the reach of the United States and the mechanics of the new era. Previously, Beijing had viewed technological independence as an important long-term goal. After Snowden, it saw dependence on U.S. technology as an urgent short-term threat. As our work with the political scientists Yeling Tan and Mark Dallas has shown, articles in Chinese state media began to trumpet the crucial role of “information security” and “data sovereignty” to China’s national security.

The real wake-up call came when the first Trump administration threatened to cut off ZTE, a major Chinese telecommunications company, from access to U.S. technology and then weaponized export controls against Huawei, which the administration had come to see as an urgent threat to U.S. tech dominance and national security. Chinese state media began to focus on the risks posed by “chokepoints” and the need for “self-reliance.”

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen addressing media in Brussels, June 2025
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen addressing media in Brussels, June 2025Yves Herman / Reuters

These fears translated into policy actions as the Chinese Communist Party developed a “whole-of-nation system” to secure China’s technological independence, calling for “breakthroughs in major ‘chokepoint’ technologies and products.” China also began to think about how it could better exploit its advantages in rare-earth mining and processing, where it had gained a stranglehold as U.S. and other companies fell out of the market. China’s power in this sector comes not from a simple monopoly over the minerals, which the country doesn’t fully possess, but from its domination of the economic and technological ecosystem necessary to extract and process them. Notably, these critical minerals are used for a variety of high-tech industrial purposes, including producing the specialized magnets that are crucial to cars, planes, and other sophisticated technologies.

China had already threatened to cut back its rare-earth supply to Japan during a 2010 territorial dispute, but it lacked the means to exploit this chokepoint systematically. After it woke up to the threat of the United States’ exploitation of chokepoints, China stole a page from the American playbook. In 2020, Beijing put in place an export control law that repurposed the basic elements of the U.S. system. This was followed in 2024 by new regulations restricting the export of dual-use items. In short order, China built a bureaucratic apparatus to turn chokepoints into practical leverage. China also realized that in a world of weaponized interdependence, power comes not from possessing substitutable commodities but from controlling the technological stack. Just as the United States restricted the export of chip manufacturing equipment and software, China forbade the export of equipment necessary to process rare earths. These complex regulatory systems provide China not only with greater control but also with crucial information about who is buying what, allowing it to target other countries’ pain points with greater finesse.

This is why American and European manufacturers found themselves in a bind this June. China did not use its new export control system simply to retaliate against Trump but to squeeze Europe and discourage it from siding with the United States. German car manufacturers such as Mercedes and BMW worried as much as their U.S. competitors that their production lines would grind to a halt without specialized magnets. When the United States and China first reached a provisional deal, Trump announced on Truth Social that “FULL MAGNETS, AND ANY NECESSARY RARE EARTHS, WILL BE SUPPLIED, UP FRONT, BY CHINA,” recognizing the urgency of the threat to the U.S. economy. China’s long-term problem is that its state is too powerful and too willing to intervene in the domestic economy for purely political purposes, hampering investment and potentially strangling innovation. Still, in the short term, it has built the critical capacity to reimpose controls as it deems necessary to resist further U.S. demands.

ALL TALK

Whether Europe can withstand pressure from Beijing—and, for that matter, from Washington—remains an open question. Europe has many of the capacities of a geoeconomic superpower but lacks the institutional machinery to make use of them. The SWIFT system, after all, is based in Belgium, as is Euroclear, the settlement infrastructure for many euro-based assets. European companies—including the Dutch semiconductor lithography giant ASML, the German enterprise software firm SAP, and the Swedish 5G provider Ericsson—occupy key chokepoints in technology stacks. The European single market is by some measures the second largest in the world, potentially allowing it to squeeze companies that want to sell goods to European businesses and consumers.

But that would require Europe to build its own comprehensive suite of institutions and independent stack of technologies. That is unlikely to happen in the short to medium term, unless the nascent “EuroStack” project, which aims to secure Europe from foreign interference by building an independent information technology base, really takes off. Even though Europe woke up to the danger of weaponized interdependence during the first Trump administration, it quickly fell back asleep.

In fairness, the EU’s weaknesses also reflect its unique circumstances: it depends on an outside military patron. The Russian invasion of Ukraine has heightened Europe’s short-term dependence on the United States, even as European countries struggle to bolster their defensive capacities. The Biden administration put a friendly gloss on economic coercion, coordinating with European governments such as the Netherlands to limit exports of ASML’s machinery to China. At the same time, the United States provided Europe with the detailed intelligence that it needed to wield financial sanctions and export controls against Russia, obviating the need for Europe to develop its own abilities.

Europe’s lassitude is heightened by internal divisions. When China imposed a series of export restrictions on Lithuania to punish it for its political support of Taiwan in 2021, German companies pressed the Lithuanian government to de-escalate. Again and again, Europe’s response to the threat of Chinese economic coercion has been kneecapped by European companies desperate to maintain their access to Chinese markets. At the same time, measures to increase economic security are repeatedly watered down by EU member states or qualified by trade missions to Beijing, which are full of senior officials eager to make deals.

Rubio meeting with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, July 2025
Rubio meeting with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, July 2025Mandel Ngan / Reuters

Most profoundly, Europe finds it nearly impossible to act coherently on economic security because its countries jealously retain individual control over national security, whereas the EU as a whole manages trade and key aspects of market regulation. There are many highly competent officials scattered throughout the European Commission’s trade directorate and the national capitals of member states but few ways for them to coordinate on large-scale actions combining economic instruments with national security objectives.

The result is that Europe has a profusion of economic security goals but lacks the means to achieve them. Although European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has warned of “the risk of weaponization of interdependencies,” and her commission has prepared a genuinely sophisticated strategy for European economic security, it doesn’t have the bureaucratic tools to deliver results. It has no equivalent of the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), which is capable of gathering information and targeting measures against opponents, or of China’s new export control machinery.

One immediate test is whether Europe will use its purported big bazooka, the “anti-coercion instrument,” or let it rust into obsolescence. This complex legal mechanism—which allows the EU to respond to coercion through a broad set of tools, including limiting market access, foreign direct investment, and public procurement—is supposed to allow Brussels to retaliate against allies and adversaries. The instrument was conceived as a response to the threat of Trump’s first administration and hastily retrofitted to provide a means of pushing back against China.

From the beginning, however, European officials made it clear that they hoped they would never have to actually use the anti-coercion instrument, believing that its mere existence would be a sufficient deterrent. That has turned out to be a grave misjudgment. The anti-coercion instrument is encumbered with legalistic safeguards intended to ensure that the European Commission will not deploy it without sufficient approval from EU member states. Those safeguards make other powers such as China and the United States doubt that it will ever be used against them. Its lengthy deployment process will give them the opportunity they need to disarm any enforcement action, using threats and promises to mobilize internal opposition against it. As with earlier European efforts to block sanctions, China and the United States can usually bet on the EACO principle that “Europe Always Chickens Out” in geoeconomic confrontations. Europe lacks the information, institutional clout, and internal agreement to do much else.

The anti-coercion instrument is the exact opposite of the “Doomsday Machine” in the film Dr. Strangelove, the classic Cold War satire. That machine was a disaster because it automatically launched nuclear missiles in response to an attack but was kept a closely guarded secret until an attack was launched. In contrast, European officials talk incessantly about their doomsday device, but Europe’s adversaries feel sure that it will never be deployed; that certainty encourages them to coerce European companies and countries at their leisure.

SELF-SABOTAGE

Europe is hampered by structural weaknesses, but the United States’ difficulties largely result from its own choices. After decades of slowly building the complex machinery of economic warfare, the United States is ripping it apart.

This is in part an unintended consequence of domestic politics. The second Trump administration imposed a hiring freeze across the federal government, hitting many institutions including the Treasury’s Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, which oversees OFAC, and leaving key positions unfilled and departments understaffed. Initial budget proposals anticipate an overall reduction in funding for the office, even as the number of sanctions-related programs has continued to rise. Although U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has expressed support for his department’s Bureau of Industry and Security, which is chiefly responsible for export controls, the agency lost over a dozen employees as part of the government’s sweeping force reductions. OFAC and the BIS were never as all-seeing as their reputations suggested and sometimes made mistakes. Nonetheless, they provided Washington with an extraordinary edge. Other countries had no equivalent to OFAC’s maps of global finance or the detailed understanding of semiconductor supply chains developed by key officials on Biden’s National Security Council.

Such institutional decay is the inevitable consequence of Trumpism. In Trump’s eyes, all institutional restraints on his power are illegitimate. This has led to a large overhaul of the apparatus that has served to direct economic security decisions over the last decades. As the journalist Nahal Toosi has documented in Politico, the National Security Council, which is supposed to coordinate security policy across the federal government and agencies, has cut its staff by more than half. The State Department has been decimated by job cuts, while the traditional interagency process through which policy gets made and communicated has virtually disappeared, leaving officials in the dark over what is expected of them and allowing adventurous officials to fill the vacuum with their own uncoordinated initiatives. Instead, policy is centered on Trump himself and whoever has last talked to him in the uncontrolled cavalcade of visitors streaming through the Oval Office. As personalism replaces bureaucratic decision-making, short-term profit trumps long-term national interest.

This is leading to pushback from allies—and from U.S. courts. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney recently warned that “the United States is beginning to monetize its hegemony.” U.S. federal courts, which have long been exceedingly deferential to the executive when it comes to national security issues, may be having second thoughts. In May, the U.S. Court of International Trade issued a striking decision, holding that the United States had overstepped its authority when it invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act—the legal bedrock for much of U.S. coercive power—to impose tariffs on Canada and Mexico. That decision has been appealed to the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, but the judgment is likely just the first of many challenges. Notably, the trade case resulted from a complaint filed by conservative and libertarian lawyers.

The Trump administration’s assault on state institutions is weakening the material sources of American power. Across core sectors—finance, technology, and energy—the administration is making the United States less central than it used to be. Trump and his allies are aggressively pushing cryptocurrencies, which are more opaque and less accountable than the traditional greenback, and forswearing enforcement actions against cryptocurrency platforms that enable sanctions evasion and money laundering. In April, the U.S. government lifted sanctions against Tornado Cash, a service that had laundered hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of stolen cryptocurrency for North Korea, according to the U.S. Department of Treasury. And the bipartisan American love affair with stablecoins, a kind of cryptocurrency, is pushing China and Europe to accelerate their efforts to develop alternative payment systems.

Economic interdependence has been turned against the United States.

In some instances, the Trump administration has reversed Biden’s policies and promoted the diffusion of previously controlled technology. In a remarkable deal with the United Arab Emirates, the Trump administration agreed to facilitate the massive expansion of data centers in the region using advanced U.S. semiconductors despite continued relations between the UAE and China and warnings from policy experts that the United States should not depend on the Middle East for AI.

Most recently, the spending bill that Trump and his congressional allies pushed through earlier this summer effectively cedes control of next-generation energy technology to China by doubling down on the carbon economy. Even as Washington works to counteract Chinese influence over critical minerals, it is eliminating measures aimed at minimizing U.S. dependence on Chinese supply chains in the crucial areas of renewable energy and battery development and radically defunding its investment in science. The result is that the United States will face the unenviable choice between relying on Chinese energy technology or trying its best to make do with the moribund technologies of an earlier age.

One might have expected that the United States would respond to the age of weaponized interdependence as it responded to the earlier era of nuclear proliferation: by recalibrating its long-term strategy, building the institutional capabilities necessary to make good policy, and strengthening its global position. Instead, it is placing its bets on short-term dealmaking, gutting institutional capacity to analyze information and coordinate policy, and poisoning the economic and technological hubs that it still controls.

This does not just affect Washington’s ability to coerce others; it also undermines the attractiveness of key U.S. economic platforms. The use of weaponized interdependence always exploited the advantages of the “American stack”: the mutually reinforcing suite of institutional and technological relationships that drew others into the United States’ orbit. When used wisely, weaponization advanced slowly and within boundaries that others could tolerate.

Now, however, the United States is spiraling into a rapid and uncontrollable drawdown of its assets, pursuing short-term goals at the expense of long-term objectives. It is increasingly using its tools in a haphazard way that invites miscalculations and unanticipated consequences. And it is doing so in a world in which other countries are not only developing their own capacities to punish the United States but also building technological stacks that may be more appealing to the world than the United States’. If China leaps ahead on energy technology, as seems likely, other countries are going to be pulled into its orbit. Dark warnings from the United States about the risks of dependence on China will ring hollow to countries that are all too aware of how willing the United States is to weaponize interdependence for its own selfish purposes.

TIME TO REBUILD

In the first decades of the nuclear age, American policymakers faced enormous uncertainty about how to achieve stability and peace. That led them to make major investments in institutions and strategic doctrines that could prevent nightmare scenarios. Washington, now entering a similar moment in the age of weaponized interdependence, finds itself in a particularly precarious position.

The current U.S. administration recognizes that the United States is not only able to exploit others’ economic vulnerabilities but also deeply vulnerable itself. Addressing these problems, however, would require the administration to act counter to Trump’s deepest instincts.

The main problem is that as national security and economic policy merge, governments have to deal with excruciatingly complex phenomena that are not under their control: global supply chains, international financial flows, and emerging technological systems. Nuclear doctrines focused on predicting a single adversary’s responses; today, when geopolitics is shaped in large part by weaponized interdependence, governments must navigate a terrain with many more players, figuring out how to redirect private-sector supply chains in directions that do not hurt themselves while anticipating the responses of a multitude of governmental and 
nongovernmental actors.

Making the United States capable of holding its own in the age of weaponized interdependence will require more than just halting the rapid, unscheduled disassembly of the bureaucratic structures that constrain seat-of-the-pants policymaking and self-dealing. Successful strategy in an age of weaponized interdependence requires building up these very institutions to make them more flexible and more capable of developing the deep expertise that is needed to understand an enormously complex world in which Washington’s adversaries now hold many of the cards. That may be a difficult sell for a political system that has come to see expertise as a dirty word, but it is vitally necessary to preserve the national interest.

China built a bureaucratic apparatus to turn chokepoints into practical leverage.

Washington has focused more on thinking about how best to use these weapons than on when they ought not be used. Other countries have been willing to rely on U.S. technological and financial infrastructure despite the risks because they perceived the United States as a government whose self-interest was constrained, at least to some extent, by the rule of law and a willingness to consider the interests of its allies. That calculus has shifted, likely irreversibly, as the second Trump administration has made it clear that it views the countries that the United States has historically been closest to less as allies than as vassal states. Without clear and enforceable limits on U.S. coercion, the most dominant U.S.-based multinational firms, such as Google and J. P. Morgan, will find themselves trapped in the no man’s land of a new war zone, taking incoming fire from all sides. As countries work to insulate themselves from U.S. coercion (and American infrastructure), global markets are experiencing deep fragmentation and fracturing. There is “a growing acceptance of fragmentation” in the global economy, former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers has warned, and “maybe even more troubling—I think there’s a growing sense that ours may not be the best fragment to be associated with.”

That, in turn, suggests a deeper lesson. The United States benefited from its ability to weaponize interdependence over the last quarter century. It enjoyed the advantages of an international economy based on multilateral institutions and a technological regime built around its self-image as a liberal power, even while acting in unilateral and sometimes illiberal ways to secure its interests as it saw fit. Just a year ago, some American intellectuals and policymakers hoped that this system could survive into the indefinite future, so that unilateral U.S. coercive strength and liberal values would continue to go hand in hand.

That now seems extremely unlikely. The United States is faced with a choice: a world in which aggressive American coercion and U.S. hegemonic decline reinforce each other or one in which Washington realigns itself with other liberal-minded countries by forswearing the abuse of its unilateral powers. Not too long ago, American officials and many intellectuals perceived the age of weaponized interdependence and the age of American hegemony as one and the same. Such assumptions now seem outdated, as other countries gain these weapons, too. As during the nuclear era, the United States needs to turn away from unilateralism, toward détente and arms control, and, perhaps in the very long term, toward rebuilding an interdependent global economy on more robust foundations. A failure to do so will put both American security and American prosperity at risk.

Friday, October 03, 2025

Israel’s interception of the Gaza aid flotilla is a clear violation of international law

Israel’s interception of the Gaza aid flotilla is a clear violation of international law


The Israel Defence Force has intercepted a flotilla of humanitarian vessels seeking to deliver aid to Gaza, taking control of multiple vessels and arresting activists, including Greta Thunberg.

The interceptions took place in the Mediterranean Sea between 70-80 nautical miles off the Gazan coast. These are international waters where international law recognises high seas freedom of navigation for all vessels.

Israel has countered by arguing it has a maritime blockade which prohibits entry to Gaza by foreign vessels. Israel has also suggested the flotilla was supported by Hamas – an assertion the flotilla organisers have rejected.


Gaza humanitarian aid flotillas

The Global Sumud Flotilla was comprised of more than 40 boats carrying humanitarian aid (food, medical supplies and other essential items), along with several hundred parliamentarians, lawyers and activists from dozens of countries.

The flotilla departed Spain in late August and has been making its way eastwards across the sea, with stops in Tunisia, Italy and Greece. Along the way, the Italian and Spanish governments deployed naval escorts to ensure their safe passage.

Passengers on the boats alleged they had been harassed by drones at mulitple points in the voyage.

This flotilla campaign is the latest iteration of a movement that has existed for over 15 years to challenge Israel’s long-running blockade of the Gaza Strip.

Earlier this year, a ship called the Conscience carrying activists and aid bound for Gaza was hit by explosions off the coast of Malta.

Israel then intercepted the Madleen, with Thunberg and other activists on board, in June, and the Handala in July.

And in 2010, a flotilla tried to reach Gaza carrying humanitarian relief and hundreds of activists. Israeli commandos boarded the Turkish-flagged Mavi Marmara, leading to a violent confrontation that resulted in the deaths of ten activists. The deaths drew widespread condemnation and strained Israeli-Turkish ties for years.


The legality of Gaza’s naval blockade

The international law related to the actions of the flotilla vessels and Israel’s capacity to intervene is complex.

Israel has imposed blockades of Gaza in various forms for nearly 20 years.

The legal basis for the blockades and their consistency with international law, particularly the law of the sea, has been contentious, which was highlighted during a UN inquiry that followed the Mavi Marmara incident.

While Israel’s legal relationship with Gaza has varied during this time, Israel is now considered an occupying power in Gaza under international law.

The roles of occupying powers were codified in the Fourth Geneva Convention in 1949 and built upon the legal obligations that Allied powers assumed in Germany and Japan at the end of the second world war. The Geneva Convention outlines the clear legal framework for occupying powers.

In recent decades, Israel has been both a de jure (recognised under the law) and de facto occupying power in Palestine.

In 2024, the International Court of Justice ruled Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territories was illegal under international law.

As an occupying power, Israel controls all access to Gaza whether by land, air or sea. Aid trucks are only permitted to enter Gaza under strict controls. Foreign air force aid drops that have occurred in recent months have only been permitted under strict Israeli control, as well.

Very little aid has arrived by sea since the war began because Israel has severely restricted maritime access to Gaza. The United States built a floating pier off the coast to deliver aid in 2024, but this was soon abandoned because of weather, security and technical issues.

This clearly indicated, however, that Israel was prepared to permit the flow of maritime aid from its closest ally, the US. This exception to the blockade was not applied to other humanitarian actors.

Intercepting ships in international waters

While delivery of aid by sea is legally problematic at the moment, there are limits to Israel’s ability to disrupt flotillas. The freedom of navigation is central to the law of the sea. As such, the flotilla is entitled to sail unimpeded in the Mediterranean Sea.

Any harassment or stopping of the flotilla within the Mediterranean’s international waters is therefore a clear violation of international law.

Crucial to this is the actual location where Israeli forces intercept and board flotilla vessels.

Israel can certainly exercise control over the 12 nautical mile territorial sea off Gaza’s shores. Its closure of the territorial sea to foreign vessels would be justified under international law as a security measure, as well as to ensure the safety of neutral vessels due to the ongoing war.

Flotilla organisers said their ships were intercepted between 70 to 80 nautical miles from shore, well beyond Gaza’s territorial sea.

No doubt this was done for operational reasons. The closer the flotilla came to the Gazan coast, the more difficult it would be for the Israel Defence Force to successfully intercept each ship, raising the possibility that at least one vessel may make landfall.

Scores of activists onboard the ships have reportedly been detained and will be taken into custody in the Israeli port of Ashdod. They will then likely be quickly deported.

The activists have protections under international human rights law, as well, including access to foreign diplomats exercising consular protection for their citizens.


Mass global protests erupt over Israel’s interception of Gaza aid Flotilla

Activists including Greta Thunberg were detained as worldwide demonstrations call for humanitarian aid, accountability, and an end to the Gaza blockade.


Israel’s Gaza Flotilla raid: Anger against Netanyahu mounts; protests rock Italy, France, Germany

Mass protests erupted worldwide following Israel’s interception of the Gaza aid flotilla, spreading across Europe, Turkey, South America, and beyond.

The operation, which led to the detention of activists including climate campaigner Greta Thunberg, deprived Gaza’s besieged population of critical aid amid famine conditions reported by the United Nations.

Demonstrators accused Israel of aggression, demanded the release of detained activists, and criticised Western and national governments for complicity.

The protests saw railway blockades, clashes with police, and union-backed strikes, reflecting growing global pressure on Israel and calls for urgent humanitarian aid for Gaza.

Protesters rallied against Israel's interception of the Global Sumud Flotilla, which left Gaza’s besieged population without aid amid famine conditions reported by the United Nations.

The flotilla comprised 41 vessels carrying over 400 people, including politicians and activists like Thunberg, all stopped by the Israeli navy. In Barcelona, around 15,000 people marched chanting slogans like “Gaza, you are not alone,” “Boycott Israel,” and “Freedom for Palestine,” with riot police intervening when protesters attempted to climb barriers.

Former Barcelona mayor Ada Colau and activists, including Nelson Mandela’s grandson Mandla Mandela, faced deportation after trying to sail with the flotilla.

Protests also took place in Dublin, Paris, Marseille, Berlin, The Hague, Tunis, Brasilia, Buenos Aires, Rome, Milan, Torino, Florence, Bologna, Istanbul, Brussels, Geneva, Athens, and Kuala Lumpur, showing global outrage over Israel’s actions.

Demonstrators called for the release of flotilla members, halting financial and academic ties with Israel, and protection for civilians in Gaza, highlighting mounting international pressure for accountability and humanitarian relief.

Trump said he believed Hamas was ready for peace and told Israel to stop bombing Gaza

Hamas declared it was ready to free hostages under Trump's ceasefire plan

Story by AFP 04-0-2025

US President Donald Trump said Friday he believed Hamas was ready for peace and told Israel to stop bombing Gaza, after the Palestinian militant group declared it was ready to free hostages under his ceasefire plan.

"Based on the Statement just issued by Hamas, I believe they are ready for a lasting PEACE. Israel must immediately stop the bombing of Gaza, so that we can get the Hostages out safely and quickly!" Trump posted on Truth Social.

"Right now, it's far too dangerous to do that. We are already in discussions on details to be worked out. This is not about Gaza alone, this is about long sought PEACE in the Middle East."

The Hamas statement came hours after Trump had given a deadline of late Sunday to respond to the peace plan he unveiled earlier this week at the White House or face "hell."

"The movement announces its approval for the release of all hostages -- living and remains -- according to the exchange formula included in President Trump's proposal," the Hamas statement said, adding it was ready to enter talks "to discuss the details."

Trump also shared the Hamas statement on his social media -- in an almost unheard of move for a US president -- as did the White House.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said earlier that Trump would make remarks on Hamas's "acceptance" of his deal, and posted a picture of him addressing television cameras from behind his desk.

"Behind the Scenes in the Oval Office: President Trump responds to Hamas' acceptance of his Peace Plan," Leavitt posted on X. "Stay tuned!"

Trump unveiled the 20-point peace plan alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on Monday, saying that if Hamas rejected it he would back Israel to "finish the job." 

A senior Hamas official, Mahmoud Mardawi, told AFP on Friday that Trump's plan was "vague, ambiguous and lacks clarity."

dk/sms


Hamas welcomes parts of US proposal for ending Gaza war, but seeks follow-up talks

Story by Jacob Magid-The Times of Israel-MSN 03-10-2025

Hamas announces that it has submitted its response to US President Donald Trump’s proposal for ending the Gaza war, declaring that it is prepared to release all remaining hostages under the terms laid out in the plan and that it is ready to immediately enter negotiations with the mediators to discuss the details.

The group is ostensibly referring to talks that still need to be held regarding the identities of the roughly 2,000 Palestinian security prisoners and bodies of slain Gazans who would be released in exchange for the 48 hostages, 20 of whom are believed to be alive.

But the Hamas statement stipulates that the hostages will be released “with the provision of the field conditions necessary for the exchange process.”

It does not elaborate further on this issue, but the stance suggests that it may not be able to release all 48 hostages within 72 hours of the deal coming into place — as the US plan states — if the conditions on the ground are not appropriate. The terror group has, in the past, told mediators that it doesn’t know where some of the bodies of slain hostages are located and that it may take some time to deliver all of them back to Israel.

Hamas also reiterates its willingness to hand over control of Gaza to an independent body of Palestinian technocrats, as envisioned by the US proposal.

“As for what was included in President Trump’s proposal regarding other issues related to the future of the Gaza Strip and the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people, this… will be discussed through a comprehensive Palestinian national framework, which Hamas will be part of,” the terror group says.

All other issues pertaining to the future of Gaza would include the question of whether Hamas will disarm — a key component of the US proposal — one that has been a red line for Hamas and something that the group’s statement gives no indication that it is prepared to accept.

Moreover, Hamas’s desire to be part of a national Palestinian dialogue regarding the future political aspirations of the Palestinian people also appears to conflict with the terms of the deal, which stipulate that Hamas can have no role — direct or indirect — in the governance of Gaza.

Hamas says it conducted talks with other factions in order to come up with the response presented to the mediators.

The group says it appreciated international efforts on the matter, including the one advanced by Trump, highlighting the US proposal’s provisions ending the war, releasing Palestinian prisoners, surging aid into Gaza, rejecting the occupation of the Strip, and rejecting the displacement of Palestinians from the enclave.

It’s also not immediately clear whether the formal response submitted to the mediators is the same as the public statement, given that the latter also makes no mention of Hamas’s qualms regarding the proposal’s envisioned withdrawal of the IDF from Gaza.

An Arab diplomat told The Times of Israel that Hamas and the mediators were expected to seek amendments regarding this issue, due to displeasure with the 11th-hour changes that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu secured that slowed and limited the pull-out of Israeli troops.

The post Hamas welcomes parts of US proposal for ending Gaza war, but seeks follow-up talks appeared first on The Times of Israel.

Israel bombs Gaza homes; Hamas responds to Trump proposal


Gaza Faces Renewed Displacement and Bombardment Amid Escalating Conflict

By Jillian Kestler-D'Amours and Fiona Kelliher 3 Oct 2025

Hamas says it has submitted its response to Gaza mediators, agreeing to free all Israeli captives under US President Donald Trump’s peace plan and handing over administration of the enclave to Palestinian technocrats.

At least 72 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli attacks across the Gaza Strip since dawn, including 42 in Gaza City alone, according to medical sources speaking to Al Jazeera.

Israel’s army is using remote-controlled vehicles packed with explosives to demolish entire neighbourhoods in besieged Gaza City after issuing a “last chance” to leave warning to hundreds of thousands of trapped Palestinians.

Israel’s war on Gaza has killed at least 66,288 people and wounded 169,165 since October 2023. Thousands more are believed to be buried under the rubble. A total of 1,139 people were killed in Israel during the October 7, 2023, attacks and about 200 were taken captive.

What remains of Gaza?

What remains of Gaza?

Israel has reduced large swaths of the territory to rubble. It will take decades and tens of billions of dollars to repair the damage

Heba Saleh in Cairo  FT 03-10-2025

Palestinian poet Fedaa Zeyad resisted fleeing her temporary home in Shati refugee camp in the west of Gaza City for as long as she could. 

For days in early September she endured loud explosions and the ground shaking beneath her feet as Israeli forces pounded and demolished neighbouring districts in the famine-stricken city — the largest urban centre in the enclave, which was then housing up to 1mn people. 

Zeyad hoped for “a miracle” so she would not be displaced yet again during the two-year war. But when the bombing reached her street she joined an exodus of hundreds of thousands of battered Gazans heading south to escape an impending advance of Israeli tanks into their city. “This time there will be no return to Gaza City,” says Zeyad, who has moved to the so far relatively undamaged town of Deir al-Balah in the centre of the strip. “If I ever go back, it will not be the same city I have known. Already much of it has been erased and obliterated.” Zeyad’s prediction is an indication of the task ahead, should the war triggered by the October 2023 Hamas attack on southern Israel come to an end. Over two years of relentless bombardment and repeated ground incursions, Israel’s offensive has pulverised the Gaza Strip, reducing huge swaths of it to rubble and wrecking its agricultural land and food systems. 

Last week, the US put forward a ceasefire and postwar plan that is backed by Israel and Arab states. It is conditioned on the disarming of Hamas militants and envisions that control of the territory would pass to a supervisory body, dubbed the “board of peace” that will oversee a Palestinian committee administering day-to-day affairs. Hamas, which has ruled Gaza since 2007, is yet to formally respond to the proposal. 

But even if the plan is adopted and a ceasefire holds, it could cost billions of dollars and take many years to clear some 54mn tonnes of concrete debris and rebuild Gaza’s vital infrastructure and battered cities, according to UN estimates. 

Three small girls carry big buckets of water in a refugee camp

Much of Gaza’s 2.1mn population have been crowded in tents in camps where there are no public services such as running water or proper sanitation © Hamza Z H Qraiqea/Anadolu/Getty Images 

A senior aid official who closely monitors the destruction says that last year there had been hope of using “an incremental model” to fix and upgrade existing neighbourhoods and facilities. But the extent of the damage in the months since now demands a ground-up approach. 

 The US-backed Gaza plan, which includes a phased Israeli withdrawal with no firm timeline, would also leave Israel in control of a buffer zone inside the perimeter of the enclave. “There are serious problems in the proposal,” says Amjad Shawa, director of the Palestinian Non-Governmental Organisations Network. “But we Palestinians cling to any chink of hope. The priority is to stop the killing.” 

Though the US plan states explicitly that there will be no forced displacement, many Gazans are fearful that the devastation is a prelude to expelling them from the enclave or forcing them into what Israeli officials call “voluntary emigration” because their homeland has been rendered uninhabitable. 

“I feel we are being uprooted, not just [temporarily] displaced,” says Shawa. “This total ravaging of the land is aimed at breaking our connection with it, so they can plant the idea that there is nothing to come back to.” 

The toll from the war on Gazan society can be understood not only in terms of the numbers of those killed, injured or displaced but is also reflected in the decimation of vital infrastructure and resources that underpinned life on the strip. 

The latest UN assessment, based on satellite imagery published on August 6, shows that 78 per cent of buildings in the Gaza Strip have been damaged and more than half of them completely destroyed. 

Almost all cropland has undergone some level of destruction and will need rehabilitation to become productive again. Large tracts of farming land have also become inaccessible because they are located in no-go military zones controlled by Israel. 

Smoke rises from destroyed buildings following an Israeli air strike inside Gaza, as seen from the Israeli side, near the border with Gaza Strip, in southern Israel, 12 August 2025.

The aftermath of an air strike in Gaza in August. Hardly a corner of the strip has been spared the ferocious bombardment of Israel’s armed forces © Abir Sultan/EPA 

A majority of schools have been either destroyed or severely damaged and not a single university has been left standing. Students have lost a second year of education and no one knows how or when learning could resume. 

In addition to the destruction, more than 80 per cent of the territory of the Gaza Strip has been subsumed into Israeli military exclusion zones, or is covered by forced displacement orders. Of that area, half is estimated to have been completely destroyed, aid officials say. 

Much of the 2.1mn population have been crowded in tents in parts of central Gaza or in the southern Mawasi coastal strip where there are no public services such as running water or proper sanitation. 

In February, the World Bank estimated it would cost around $53bn in recovery and reconstruction for damage inflicted during the first year of war up to October 2024. It has yet to update its estimate, but since then hardly a corner of the strip has been spared the ferocious bombardment of Israel’s armed forces. 

“Everything has been lost and very little remains,” says PNGO’s Shawa. “The damage this time is unlike in any previous wars in Gaza. The place needs to be rebuilt from scratch.” 

The trauma and loss of life, frequent forced displacement of exhausted people along with restrictions on the entry of aid have fuelled a humanitarian catastrophe. Famine has taken hold in Gaza City and its surrounding area, a UN-backed hunger monitor declared in August, and is likely to spread to other parts of the enclave. 

A UN-appointed panel and human rights groups have accused Israel of committing genocide in Gaza, allegations rejected by Israeli leaders who insist they are conducting a necessary war against terrorism. Israel says it is rooting out infrastructure used by Hamas to conceal tunnels, launch attacks on Israeli troops and hide weapons. It has repeatedly denied that it is demolishing entire Palestinian towns and neighbourhoods in order to prevent civilians from being able to return after hostilities cease. 

Benjamin Netanyahu, the prime minister, said at the UN last week that Israel had been “wiping out the Hamas terror regime” across Gaza and dealing with “hundreds of miles of terror tunnels underground, and countless terror towers above ground”. 

Israel’s onslaught has killed more than 66,000 Palestinians, according to local health authorities. The October 2023 Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel killed 1,200 people, according to the government. Hamas also took 250 people hostage and still holds 48 captives, only 20 of whom are believed to be alive. 

In Gaza City, as elsewhere in the strip, entire residential blocks have been levelled, bombed, bulldozed or blown up by remote-controlled explosive-laden armoured vehicles. The systematic demolitions started on the eastern and southern flanks of the city months before Israel ordered a full evacuation of residents on September 9 and, a week later, launched its ground offensive. 

If a ceasefire does not come through and the full evacuation goes ahead, Gaza City is likely to be “completely destroyed”, the aid official says, pointing to what has happened in the past. 

According to the UN assessments of satellite imagery 78% of buildings in the Gaza Strip have been damaged. More than half have been completely destroyed. 98.5% of cropland has undergone some level of destruction and will need rehabilitation to become productive. 90% of schools have either been destroyed or severely damaged and not a single university has been left standing. 

On Wednesday, Israel Katz, the defence minister, said Israel was tightening its encirclement of Gaza City and has ordered all remaining residents to leave. Those who refuse will be treated as “terrorists and supporters of terror”, he warned.

 Demolitions have been used in various parts of the strip to raze buildings and clear land of all construction. An Israeli reservist who served in Gaza and gave testimony to Breaking the Silence, an Israeli NGO dedicated to ending the occupation of Palestinian territories, tells the FT how a method, dubbed the “Kung Fu Panda”, was used to blow up buildings. 

“It is a kind of APC [armoured personnel carrier] — no longer in military use — that has been packed with lots of explosives and an emulsion. You introduce it in a house, you detonate it and there is no house,” says the reservist. “The landscape was completely flattened — you only see ruins.” 

Gomaa Salama, a teacher from Rafah governorate on the southern border with Egypt, returned to his house in January when a ceasefire was declared. He recalls a tense atmosphere, with drones surveilling the Palestinians residents and troops carrying out targeted house demolitions. 

To his relief, his house was still standing. It had suffered only “superficial damage” in the preceding seven months after Israeli ground forces invaded Rafah and forced out around 1mn people. 

But it was a brief respite. Israel broke the ceasefire on March 18 and ordered another forced evacuation. The army proceeded to demolish remaining structures in Rafah, and declared most of it an exclusion zone bordered in the north by the new Morag military corridor, an Israeli-controlled axis that cuts east to west across the Gaza Strip and separates Rafah from Khan Younis to its north. 

Salama monitored his house via satellite images shared by a friend. “By the third month after we left it was half destroyed and a month later the entire area was obliterated,” he says. “I am bitter because this is my life’s work gone. I built it over 12 years because I could not pay for it all at once.” 

Around the perimeter of Gaza, the Israeli army has demolished civilian structures in an expanded buffer zone, averaging one kilometre deep into the enclave. All construction has also been razed in at least four broad military corridors cutting up the enclave, including Morag, satellite images show. 

Beit Lahia, an agricultural hub in the north bordering Israel and the Mediterranean, has also been encompassed by an exclusion zone and can no longer be accessed by Palestinians. Once known for its strawberries, citrus fruit and old Sycamore trees, it is now out of bounds for the farmers who used to work its land. 

Ashraf Shafai and his four brothers farmed their family’s fields and orchards in Beit Lahia until bombardment and evacuation orders drove them out in the first month of the war. For a year, they transferred money to relatives, who had decided to stay on despite the danger, so they could buy fuel to keep the farm going. But when the brothers returned during the ceasefire, all five family homes on the land had been demolished, says Shafai. Their orchards, fields and farm equipment had all been smashed. 

“The army invaded our land in October 2024 and toppled the trees,” he says. “They bulldozed our local Lahwani apple trees and the citrus planted by our grandfathers. Anything left standing withered for lack of water. We tried to repair the irrigation system but the wells were destroyed.” 

Also wiped out is his brother Hani’s $8mn investment in an agricultural business on a nearby 24-acre farm from where he had planned to export strawberries to Israel. Speaking from the US where he has lived for 44 years, Hani Shafai says his dream had been to create jobs for locals. 

“I finished my last phase of greenhouses about a year before the war started and I had fitted all the pumps with solar panels, but now all of it is gone,” he adds. “Not a single tree is left.” 

H

Hani Shafai finished the last greenhouses in an $8mn agricultural investment in Gaza a year before the war started. He says nothing has been left standing 

Palestinian farmers inspect greenhouses and olive trees destroyed in an Israeli air strike in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip last January 

Palestinian farmers inspect greenhouses and olive trees destroyed in an Israeli air strike in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip last January © AFP/Getty Images 

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization published a satellite imagery assessment in August, which it says reveals the “staggering reality” that as famine looms in Gaza 98.5 per cent of cropland is either damaged, inaccessible or both. 

Of 15,000 hectares of cropland in Gaza before the war, only 232 hectares are still available for cultivation, says the FAO. In addition, some 83 per cent of irrigation wells have been damaged and livestock numbers have been decimated. 

The destruction of agricultural land, says Neil Marsland, FAO senior technical officer, is not just the result of crops being burnt and trees uprooted, but also an outcome of bombing and contamination from damaged sanitation infrastructure.

 Tanks and heavy weapon movements have degraded the soil in some places rendering agricultural production impossible, he adds. 

The UN has estimated that for every square metre in Gaza there is on average 383kg of debris. 

“That the conflict has contaminated the soil and the water table is beyond doubt,” says Marsland. “However, before any soil and water rehabilitation can take place, debris has to be removed.” 

The Shafai family's property has been destroyed over the course of the war

Although many Gazans relied on food aid even before the war, almost 15 per cent of the calories consumed came from domestic production, mainly protein from livestock, poultry and dairy, says Marsland. Now only 1.4 per cent of poultry has survived, 3.8 per cent of cattle and 26 per cent of sheep. 

“Agriculture was not just important for food, it was also important for livelihoods,” he explains. “People were earning incomes.” FAO estimates that before the war a quarter of Gazans derived full or partial livelihoods from agriculture and fishing. In February, the agency estimated the recovery cost for the sector at $7.4bn, which is likely to be higher now. 

“After the conflict there could be some gradual re-establishment of agriculture over the next decade, but large scale, safe cultivation and a full recovery could take several decades,” says Marsland. 

Hajj Abu Hani, a farmer from Qarara, a small town north of Khan Younis, has also lost his land to an exclusion zone. Displaced five times during the war, he now lives in a tent in Deir al-Balah. His land, which used to support an extended family of 48 people, has been impossible to reach since the ceasefire ended in March. 

“I had olive trees, 17 sheep and two cows, but now there is nothing,” says Abu Hani. “Some of the animals were killed in the bombing and others died from hunger and thirst after we left. The house has been demolished and the land bulldozed.”

Palestinians in Gaza are not just living in perpetual trauma, hunger and the destruction of their society, but their future existence in their shattered homeland remains uncertain. 

Israel’s extreme far-right government embraced a controversial plan first announced by Trump in February calling for the mass ejection of the population to Egypt and Jordan and a redevelopment of the strip as the Riviera of the Middle East.

Trump has since walked back his outlandish proposal, however. His most recent ceasefire proposal explicitly rules out Israeli occupation or annexation. The plan also has provisions for economic development and reconstruction. But all timelines are vague, including if and when Israeli forces will withdraw from the enclave. Israel would still retain its perimeter buffer zone around the Gaza Strip. 

A man waters a tiny vegetable garden amid the rubble of ruined buildings

A Palestinian tries to grow vegetables amid the ruins of Jabalia in Gaza. Israel’s offensive has destroyed huge swaths of agricultural land and domestic food production © Mahmoud Issa/Anadolu/Getty Images 

Before the announcement of the Trump plan, Netanyahu spoke frequently of the “voluntary emigration” of the Palestinians and has lambasted Egypt in recent weeks for depriving Gazans of the “human right” to flee a war zone. 

Two weeks ago, Bezalel Smotrich, the far-right finance minister who has lashed out at Nentanyahu for agreeing to the ceasefire deal, touted Gaza as a potential “real estate bonanza” that could be shared with the US. 

Netanyahu has also vowed that Israel will “finish the job” in Gaza if Hamas does not agree to the US-led deal. 

With so much destruction and uncertainty, thinking of the future is confusing and dispiriting for young Palestinians. 

“We just need to forget the future for now because all avenues appear blocked,” says Shahd Ghassan, a fifth-year dentistry student. 

She has been struggling for two years with poor internet connections to attend online lectures offered by her university, but these only cover theoretical subjects, not the practical courses she would need to become a dentist. 

“In a normal situation I would be graduating this year,” she says. “What I very much want now is a chance to leave Gaza with my family and escape this genocide.” 

Cartography by Aditi Bhandari. Additional reporting by Quique Kierszenbaum

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